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Maelstrom Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

"full-featured"(to describe an electronic device)

Can I say "this app or cellphone is more and more full-featured over time"?
Or is there any other better sayings? THANKS!
  

Top answer

It would be more usual to say "feature-rich", a term commonly used in marketing.

  • It would be more usual to say "feature-rich", a term commonly used in marketing.
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6 Answers
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It would be more usual to say "feature-rich", a term commonly used in marketing.
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Anonymous It would be more usual to say "feature-rich", a term commonly used in marketing.
Thanks!
But what's the specific term for a mobile/handheld device that's got powerful features? (As opposed to having a myriad of apps that might not be powerful/useful in the first place)

Thanks:)
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That's more of a marketing question than an English language or grammar question - it will depend on what image you wish to convey about the device in question and what is "powerful" about those features. Imagine you were the customer: what adjectives would persuade you to buy this device? What terms do competitors use?
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Anonymous That's more of a marketing question than an English language or grammar question - it will depend on what image you wish to convey about the device in question and what is "powerful" about those features. Imagine you were the customer: what adjectives would persuade you to buy this device? What terms do competitors use?
I'm not sure if it's even tha
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It would be more correct if you were to say: "powerfully-featured" or "has powerful features".
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maelstrom Can I say "this app or cellphone is more and more full-featured over time"?Or is there any other better sayings? THANKS!
I would say is becoming or has become rather than just is.

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